Cannonball Read 17

Sticking It to Cancer One Book at a Time
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About tiny_bookbot

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I teach literature to college kids in the Midwest. (Learn more about this Cannonballer: tiny_bookbot's Quick Questions interview.)

tiny_bookbot's Reviews:

If 28 Days Later and The Road had a daughter

The Last Ones Left Alive by Sarah Davis-Goff

March 18, 2021 by tiny_bookbot Leave a Comment

This was Round 2 of my ongoing “what’s going in in the world of Irish science fiction?” quest. (Round 1 was here.) First off: great title, no? I was instantly intrigued, especially with the description, and I liked this weird sense I was getting of the post-apocalypse as a site of feminist possibility rather than just endless misogyny and threatened sexual violence. (Sigh.) The premise is straightforward: Orpen lives with her mother and her mother’s partner, Maeve, on an isolated island off the coast of […]

Filed Under: Fiction, Speculative Fiction Tagged With: Ireland, Post Apocalyptic, Sarah Davis-Goff, zombies

tiny_bookbot's CBR13 Review No:11 · Genres: Fiction, Speculative Fiction · Tags: Ireland, Post Apocalyptic, Sarah Davis-Goff, zombies ·
Rating:
· 0 Comments

Light on mischief, lacking mayhem entirely

A Lady's Guide to Mischief and Mayhem by Manda Collins

March 7, 2021 by tiny_bookbot 4 Comments

I have probably just been reading and watching too many murder mysteries (and listening to too much Shedunnit) to be won over to the charms of the first book in Manda Collins’s new series, named for its first book: A Lady’s Guide to Mischief and Mayhem. The setup is pretty simple: in the earlyish (maybe mid) Victorian era, the widowed Lady Katherine Bascomb and her friend, Caroline Hardcastle, begin writing a column together for Kate’s newspaper; however, they foolishly dabble in crime reporting, and publish a […]

Filed Under: Fiction, Mystery, Romance Tagged With: Manda Collins

tiny_bookbot's CBR13 Review No:10 · Genres: Fiction, Mystery, Romance · Tags: Manda Collins ·
Rating:
· 4 Comments

Crossdressing, murder, and blackmail, oh my!

The Body at the Tower (The Agency #2) by Y. S. Lee

February 20, 2021 by tiny_bookbot 1 Comment

(Note: mild spoilers for Book #1, A Spy in the House.) This has been a fun series to read in the evenings when winding down: the plotting is nicely propulsive, historical London is very well-centered, and Mary Quinn (née Lang) remains an engaging protagonist. This sophomore entry in Lee’s The Agency series picks up about a year after the first book left off: she is now a full member of the all-ladies investigatory firm concealed within Miss Scrimshaw’s School for Girls, and her two superiors […]

Filed Under: Fiction Tagged With: historical fiction, victorian england, Victorian era, y.s. lee

tiny_bookbot's CBR13 Review No:9 · Genres: Fiction · Tags: historical fiction, victorian england, Victorian era, y.s. lee ·
Rating:
· 1 Comment

“It didn’t seem I could know it until I had lived it”

In the Castle of My Skin by George Lamming

February 13, 2021 by tiny_bookbot Leave a Comment

This is the first novel I was nervous about teaching this semester. I knew Anand and Paton would go down pretty easy with my students, but this debut novel by George Lamming, originally published in 1953, is a shaggy dog of a book, with frequent stylistic shifts, and with its main character (only named as G, and loosely based on Lamming himself) often disappearing for multiple chapters at a stretch. Sometimes in this book, loving parents beat their kids, and friends fall out over dumb […]

Filed Under: Fiction Tagged With: Barbados, george lamming

tiny_bookbot's CBR13 Review No:8 · Genres: Fiction · Tags: Barbados, george lamming ·
Rating:
· 0 Comments

“The tragedy is not that things are broken. The tragedy is that they are not mended again.”

Cry, the Beloved Country by Alan Paton

February 8, 2021 by tiny_bookbot 2 Comments

“Stand unshod upon it, for the ground is holy, being even as it came from the Creator. Keep it, guard it, care for it, for it keeps men, guards men, cares for men. Destroy it and man is destroyed.” Cry, the Beloved Country is a novel that gets read in schools a lot, probably because it has a vaguely To Kill a Mockingbird-like feel, but international, with the action moved to South Africa. The Reverend Stephen Kumalo, a black Anglican priest who lives in a rural […]

Filed Under: Fiction Tagged With: Alan Paton, reread, south africa

tiny_bookbot's CBR13 Review No:7 · Genres: Fiction · Tags: Alan Paton, reread, south africa ·
Rating:
· 2 Comments

“That’s the word! Untouchable!”

Untouchable by Mulk Raj Anand

February 6, 2021 by tiny_bookbot 2 Comments

This semester, I’m teaching a course on global anglophone literature, i.e. literature written in English that’s neither British, Irish, nor American. (Nor, for that matter, Canadian, Australian, or New Zealander, much as I wanted them! And not quite postcolonial fiction, since our first three novels are still within the late colonial period.) Mulk Raj Anand’s Untouchable, originally published in 1935, was the first novel we covered for the class (it narrowly edged out Ahmed Ali’s Twilight in Delhi), and what a beautiful entry into the subject it […]

Filed Under: Fiction Tagged With: historical fiction, India, modernism, mulk raj anand

tiny_bookbot's CBR13 Review No:6 · Genres: Fiction · Tags: historical fiction, India, modernism, mulk raj anand ·
Rating:
· 2 Comments
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